On the final weekend before Wednesday's elections, the leaders of six of the top political parties were converging on the southern city of Eindhoven for a key televised debate.
Notable by his absence was far-right MP Geert Wilders, whose Freedom Party (PVV) is within a whisker of topping the polls even though he has largely eschewed traditional campaign events.
The Dutch polls are being closely watched as a key litmus test of the rise of far-right and populist parties in Europe, with elections due in other countries later in the year.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hit back angrily saying the decision to refuse to allow minister Mevlut Cavusoglu's plane to land showed that the Dutch were "the vestiges of the Nazis, they are fascists".
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Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who was attending the debate in Eindhoven, denounced Erdogan's comments as "crazy" and "way out of line".
The peroxide-haired Wilders, who was campaigning on the streets of the southern town of Valkenberg, welcomed the decision and credited the "heavy PVV pressure" on the government.
But hundreds of kilometres away further north, thousands of people gathered to take part in a "Women's March" in Amsterdam to combat hatred and intolerance.
Modelled on the marches which took place across the globe after the inauguration of US President Donald Trump, participants donned pink and orange so-called "pussy hats" and demanded greater equality and inclusiveness in The Netherlands.
Just before today's debate, Jesse Klaver, the leader of the left-wing ecologists GroenLinks was going door-to-door on the streets of Eindhoven.
Rutte's Liberal VVD, the ruling partner in the outgoing coalition, is narrowly ahead and expected to win 24 seats on Wednesday, according to the latest polls.
Wilders and his PVV and the long-established Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) party are predicted to take 22 each.
The polls suggest that the left-wing ecologists GroenLinks could complete a stunning rise by winning 20 seats.